Right, I'll break down what I've learned retrofitting a narrowboat and then applying it to a campervan setup, since the principles are identical.
Start with your loads
Before touching a single wire, calculate your daily consumption in amp-hours. Everything from your fridge (typically 30-40Ah daily) to your heater, lights, and laptop charger. Be honest—most people underestimate by 50%. I use a simple spreadsheet: device wattage ÷ 12V = amps, then multiply by hours used daily.
Battery sizing
Your battery bank should handle 3-5 days without sun (useable capacity, not total). Lithium LiFePO₄ gives you roughly double the useable capacity versus lead-acid, though the upfront cost stings. I run 200Ah lithium and honestly wouldn't go back—the space savings alone on a van are worth it.
Solar and charging
A quality 200W+ solar array is realistic for UK conditions. Don't assume peak output; plan for 60-70% efficiency in winter. Pair it with an MPPT controller (Victron or Renogy are solid). Most vans also benefit from a split charger to top up from the engine alternator whilst driving.
The inverter question
2000W pure sine is the sweet spot for campervans—enough for kettles and power tools without massive battery drain or installation headaches.
Cabling matters
Seriously, don't cheap out here. Undersized cables = fire risk. Calculate your longest cable run and use appropriate gauges. Victron's sizing guide is worth reading properly.
Start small, monitor everything for a month, then expand. That's how you learn what actually works for your lifestyle.